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Unit 5 DBQ Feedback and Tips for Improvement

In this warm-up activity, examine your Unit 5 DBQ and identify areas of strength and growth. Learn tips for connecting the prompt and line of reasoning, and easy ways to incorporate outside evidence. Includes feedback on prompt and thesis examples.

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Unit 5 DBQ Feedback and Tips for Improvement

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  1. Warm Up: 12/14/18 • Examine your Unit 5 DBQ • What did you do well? • Where are your opportunities for growth? • Tips: • Prompt and line of reasoning need to be connected! • Outside evidence should be easy!!! Don’t panic and forget…

  2. DBQ Feedback • Prompt and Thesis- NON example: • “Expansion and Manifest Destiny caused division in America between 1830-1860 because of slavery and the Mexican American War.” • Outside evidence: • Popular Sovereignty, Irish/Chinese Immigration, CA Gold Rush, Chinese Exclusion Act, Know-Nothings, Comp. of 1850, etc……….

  3. Key Concept 5.3 • “The Union victory in the Civil War and the contested reconstruction of the South settled the issues of slavery and secession, but left many questions about the power of the federal government and citizenship rights.” • Page 57 • Big Idea Questions • Why did the North prevail in the Civil War? • What impacts did the 13-15 amendments have on women and African Americans? • What were ways the South resisted the amendments?

  4. Key Concept 5.3, I • “The North’s greater manpower and industrial resources, the leadership of Abraham Lincoln and others, and the decision to emancipate slaves eventually led to the Union military victory over the Confederacy in the devastating Civil War.” - page 57 • A) North and South dedicated their economies and societies to fighting the war • Conscription (draft) instituted in both regions • Opposition persisted in both regions • In the North: • MD newspapers were shut down by Lincoln, NYC Draft Riots - “Rich man’s war, but a poor man’s fight” • In the South: • Many farmers refused to fight, would not let slaves fight

  5. Turn and Talk: • How could someone who was drafted get out of fighting? • Why is this a problem for America?

  6. Key Concept 5.3, I • B) Evolvement of Lincoln’s war goals: • Initially, the war was fought to preserve the union • Emancipation Proclamation - issued on 9/22/1862 • Helped change the purpose of the war • Kept European powers from siding with the South • Many African Americans enlisted in the Union Army • C) While the war raged on, Lincoln sought to reunify the country • Gettysburg Address - referenced a “new birth of freedom” - sought to ensure all men truly are equal

  7. Key Concept 5.3, I • D) Early on, the Confederacy had successes, but the Union prevailed due to: • Improvements in leadership and strategy: • Sherman and Grant • Anaconda Plan - blockade • Key Victories: • Antietam - tie, strategic victory for the North (morale boost, kept Europe out of the war) • Gettysburg - issuance of the Gettysburg Address • Greater resources: • Larger population and significantly more factories • Destruction of the South’s infrastructure: • Sherman’s “March to the Sea”

  8. Key Concept 5.3, II • “Reconstruction and the Civil War ended slavery, altered the relationships between the states and the federal government, and led to debates over new definitions of citizenship, particularly regarding the rights of African Americans, women, and other minorities.” - page 58 • A) Reconstruction Amendments: • 13th - abolished slavery • 14th - born in US? You’re a citizen!; equal protection under the law • 15th - universal adult male suffrage

  9. Turn and Talk: • What did these amendments do to the Women’s Rights Movement? • What did they not do for the movement?

  10. Key Concept 5.3, II • B) Impact of the 14th and 15th amendments on the Women’s Rights Movement? • Frederick Douglass and others favored black suffrage PRIOR to women’s suffrage • Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony feared women’s suffrage would not be granted any time soon • C) Effects of Republican Congress? • Change in the balance of power between the Presidency and Congress • Presidential v. Radical Reconstruction - Congress determined when to re-admit states • Johnson’s vetoes and Congressional overrides • Impeachment of Andrew Johnson • Increased political opportunities for blacks: • Robert Smalls - steamer pilot that brought a ship to the Union Navy during the Civil War; later became a Congressman • Hiram Revels - Senator from MS (Jefferson Davis’ state), first African American to serve in the Senate

  11. Turn and Talk: • Impeachment… do you know what it is and how it works?

  12. Key Concept 5.3, II • C) • Why did Reconstruction ultimately fail? • Determined Southern Resistance: • “Redeemer” governments: • Local and state governments ousted Republican governments • Often done through violence and intimidation • KKK terrorized blacks and Republicans • North’s waningresolve: • Death of Charles Sumner in 1874 • Panic of 1873 - tainted the Republican Party and many called for a smaller government Waning = Decrease

  13. Key Concept 5.3, II • D) Land distribution post in the South Civil War: • Plantation owners owned a majority of the land • Former slaves had difficulty acquiring land: • High interest rates - (crop lien system) • Sharecropping: • Freedmen worked on farms and exchanged labor for using land and housing • Half of their crops were typically given to the land owner • If cotton prices fell (as did in the 1870s), perpetual debt was common for most sharecroppers • Most Southern blacks were sharecroppers by 1890

  14. Key Concept 5.3, II • E) Ways the 14th and 15th amendments were restricted: • Segregation: • Jim Crow laws - upheld by Plessy v. Ferguson - “Separate but equal” • Violence: • KKK and White League - intimidated African Americans from voting • Supreme Court decisions: • Civil Rights Cases - individuals and private businesses could discriminate • Local political tactics: • Poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses • However, these amendments would be used in the 20th century to uphold civil rights • Brown v. Board - overturned “separate but equal”

  15. Test Tips • Multiple Choice and Short Answer: • Reasons for the Union’s victory in the Civil War • Ways Southern governments restricted 13-15 amendments • WANING! • Essays: • Reconstruction as a turning point - discussing before and after • Connecting Reconstruction Amendments to Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s

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